“Mothering” is a grand
old word for a quality God can teach man as well as
woman; and the Squire really “mothered”
his daughter in the first days of her great sorrow.
He was always at her side. He was constantly
needing her help or her company; and Kate was quite
sensible of the great love with which he encompassed
her. At first she was inexpressibly desolate.
She had been suddenly dislodged from that life in
the heart of Piers which she had so long enjoyed, and
she felt homeless and forsaken. But Kate had
a sweet and beautiful soul, nothing in it could turn
to bitterness; and so it was not long before she was
able to carry her misfortune as she had carried her
good fortune, with cheerfulness and moderation.
For her confidence in Piers was unbroken.
Not even her father’s assertion about the lost
ring could affect it. On reflection, she was
sure there was a satisfactory explanation; if not,
it was a momentary infidelity which she was ready
to forgive. And in her determination to be faithful
to her lover, Mrs. Atheling encouraged her. “Time
brings us our own, Kitty dear,” she said; “you
have a true title to Piers’s love; so, then,
you have a true title to his hand. I have not
a doubt that you will be his wife.”
“I think that, Mother; but why
should we be separated now, and both made to suffer?”
“That is earth’s great
mystery, my dear,-the prevalence of pain
and suffering; no one is free from it. But then,
in the midst of this mystery, is set that Heavenly
Love which helps us to bear everything. I know,
Kitty, I know!”
“Father is very hard.”
“He is not. When Piers’s
father and mother say they will not have you in their
house, do you want to slip into it on the sly, or even
in defiance of them? Wait, and your hour will
come.”
“There is only one way that
it can possibly come; and that way I dare not for
a moment think of.”
“No, indeed! Who would
wish to enter the house of marriage by the gates of
death? If such a thought comes to you, send it
away with a prayer for the Duke’s life.
God can give you Piers without killing his father.
He would be a poor God if He could not. Whatever
happens in your life that you cannot change, that
is the Will of God; and to will what God wills is
sure to bring you peace, Kitty. You have your
Prayer-Book; go to the Blessed Collects in it.
You will be sure to find among them just the prayer
you need. They never once failed me,-never
once!”
“If I could have seen him just for an hour,
Mother.”
“Far better not. Your last
meeting with him in London was a very happy, joyous
one. That is a good memory to keep. If you
met him now, it would only be to weep and lament;
and I’ll tell you what, Kitty, no crying woman
leaves a pleasant impression. I want Piers to
remember you as he saw you last,-clothed
in white, with flowers in your hair and hands, and
your face beaming with love and happiness.”
Many such conversations as this one
held up the girl’s heart, and enabled her, through
a pure and steadfast faith in her lover, to enter-
“ -that
finer atmosphere,
Where footfalls of appointed
things,
Reverberant of
days to be,
Are heard in forecast echoings;
Like wave-beats
from a viewless sea.”
The first week of her trouble was
the worst; but it was made tolerable by a long letter
from Piers on the second day. It came in the Squire’s
mail-bag, and he could easily have retained it.
But such a course would have been absolutely contradictious
to his whole nature. He held the thick missive
a moment in his hand, and glanced at the large red
seal, lifting up so prominently the Richmoor arms,
and then said,-
“Here is a letter for you, Kitty.
It is from Piers. What am I to do with it?”
“Please, Father, give it to me.”
“Give it to her, Father,”
said Mrs. Atheling; and Kate’s eager face pleaded
still more strongly. Rather reluctantly, he pushed
the letter towards Kate, saying, “I would as
leave not give it to thee, but I can trust to thy
honour.”
“You may trust me, Father,”
she answered. And the Squire was satisfied with
his relenting, when she came to him a few hours later,
and said, “Thank you for giving me my letter,
Father. It has made my trouble a great deal lighter.
Now, Father, will you do me one more favour?”
“Well, dear, what is it?”
“See Piers for me, and tell
him of the promise I made to you. Say I cannot
break it, but that I send, by you, my thanks for his
letter, and my love forever more.”
“I can’t tell him about
‘love forever more,’ Kitty. That won’t
do at all.”
“Tell him, then, that all he
says to me I say to him. Dear Father, make that
much clear to him.”
“John, do what Kitty asks thee. It isn’t
much.”
“A man can’t have his
way in this house with two women to coax or bully
him out of it. What am I to do?”
“Just what Kitty asks you to do.”
“Please, Father!” And
the two words were sent straight to the father’s
heart with a kiss and a caress that were irresistible.
Three days afterwards the Squire came home from a
ride, very much depressed. He was cross with
the servant who unbuttoned his gaiters, and he looked
resentfully at Mrs. Atheling as she entered the room.
“A nice message I was sent,”
he said to her as soon as they were alone. “That
young man has given me a heart-ache. He has made
me think right is wrong. He has made me feel
as if I was the wickedest father in Yorkshire.
And I know, in my soul, that I am doing right; and
that there isn’t a better father in the three
kingdoms.”
“Whatever did he say?”
“He said I was to tell Kate
that from the East to the West, and from the North
to the South, he would love her. That from that
moment to the moment of death, and throughout all
eternity, he would love her. And I stopped him
there and then, and said I would carry no message that
went beyond the grave. And he said I was to tell
her that neither for father nor mother, nor for the
interests of the dukedom, nor for the command of the
King, would he marry any woman but her. And I
was fool enough to be sorry for him, and to promise
I would give him Kate, with my blessing, when his
father and mother asked me to do so.”
“I don’t think that was promising very
much, John.”
“Thou knowest nothing of how
I feel, Maude. But he is a good man, and true;
I think so, at any rate.”
“Tell Kitty what he said.”
“Nay, you must tell her if you
want her to know. I would rather not speak of
Piers at all. Tell her, also, that the Duchess
and Miss Vyner are going to Germany, and that Piers
goes with them as far as London. I am very glad
of this move, for we can ride about, then, without
fear of meeting them.”
All the comfort to be got from this
conversation and intelligence was given at once to
Kate; and perhaps Mrs. Atheling unavoidably made it
more emphatic than the Squire’s manner warranted.
She did not overstep the truth, however, for Piers
had spoken from his very heart, and with the most
passionate love and confidence. Indeed, the Squire’s
transcript had been but a bald and lame translation
of the young man’s fervent expressions of devotion
and constancy.
Kate understood this, and she was
comforted. Invincible Hope was at the bottom
of all her sorrow, and she soon began to look on the
circumstances as merely transitory. Yet she had
moments of great trial. One evening, while walking
with her mother a little on the outskirts of Atheling,
the Duke’s carriage, with its splendid outriders,
suddenly turned into the little lane. There was
no escape, and they looked at each other bravely,
and stood still upon the turf bordering the road.
Then the Duchess gave an order to the coachman.
There was difficulty in getting the horses to the
precise spot which was best for conversation; but
Mrs. Atheling would not take a step forward or backward
to relieve it. She stood with her hand on Kate’s
arm, Kate’s hands being full of the blue-bells
which she had been gathering.
The carriage contained only the Duchess
and Annabel. There had been no overt unpleasantness
between the ladies of the two families, and Mrs. Atheling
would not take the initiative, especially when the
question was one referring to the most delicate circumstances
of her daughter’s life. She talked with
the Duchess of her German trip, and Kate gave Annabel
the flowers, and hoped she would enjoy her new experience.
In five minutes the interview was over; nothing but
courteous words had been said, and yet Mrs. Atheling
and Kate had, somehow, a sense of intense humiliation.
The Duchess’s manner had been politely patronising,
Annabel’s languid and indifferent; and, in some
mysterious way, the servants echoed this covert atmosphere
of disdain. Little things are so momentous; and
the very attitude of the two parties was against the
Athelings. From their superb carriage, as from
a throne, the Duchess and her companion looked down
on the two simply-dressed ladies who had been gathering
wild flowers on the roadside.
“How provoking!” was Kate’s
first utterance. “Mother, I will not walk
outside the garden again until they go away; I will
not!”
“I am ashamed of you!”
answered Mrs. Atheling, angrily. “Will you
make yourself a prisoner for these two women? Tush!
Who are they? Be yourself, and who is better
than you?”
“It is easy talking, Mother.
You are as much annoyed as I am. How did they
manage to snub us so politely?”
“Position is everything, Kate.
A woman in a Duke’s carriage, with outriders
in scarlet, and coachmen and footmen in silver-laced
liveries, would snub the Virgin Mary if she met her
in a country lane, dressed in pink dimity, and gathering
blue-bells. Try and forget the affair.”
“Annabel looked ill.”
“It was her white dress.
A woman with her skin ought to know better than to
wear white.”
“Oh, Mother! if Piers had been
with them, what should I have done?”
“I wish he had been there!
You were never more lovely. I saw you for a moment,
standing at the side of the carriage; with your brown
hair blowing, and your cheeks blushing, and your hands
full of flowers, and I thought how beautiful you were;
and I wish Piers had been there.”
“They go away on Saturday.
I shall be glad when Saturday is over. I do not
think I could bear to see Piers. I should make
a little fool of myself.”
“Not you! Not you!
But it is just as well to keep out of danger.”
Certainly neither the Squire nor Kate
had any idea of meeting Piers on the following Saturday
night when they rode along Atheling lane together.
Both of them believed Piers to be far on the way to
London. They had been to the village, and were
returning slowly homeward in the gloaming. A
light like that of dreamland was lying over all the
scene; and the silence of the far-receding hills was
intensified by the murmur of the streams, and the
sleepy piping of a solitary bird. The subtle,
fugitive, indescribable fragrance of lilies-of-the-valley
was in the air; and a sense of brooding power, of
mystical communion between man and nature, had made
both the Squire and Kate sympathetically silent.
Suddenly there was the sound of horse’s
feet coming towards them; and the figure of its rider
loomed large and spectral in the gray, uncertain light.
Kate knew instantly who it was. In a moment or
two they must needs pass each other. She looked
quickly into her father’s face, and he said
huskily, “Be brave, Kate, be brave!”
The words had barely been spoken,
when Piers slowly passed them. He removed his
hat, and the Squire did the same; but Kate sat with
dropped eyes, white as marble. From her nerveless
hands the reins had fallen; she swayed in her saddle,
and the Squire leaned towards her with encouraging
touch and words. But she could hear nothing but
the hurrying flight of her lover, and the despairing
cry which the wind brought sadly back as he rode rapidly
up the little lane,-
“Kate! Kate! Kate!”
Fortunately, news of Miss Curzon’s
and Edgar’s arrival at Ashley Hall came to Atheling
that very hour; and the Squire and Mrs. Atheling were
much excited at their proposal to lunch at Atheling
Manor the next day. Kate had to put aside her
own feelings, and unite in the family joy of reunion.
There was a happy stir of preparation, and the Squire
dressed himself with particular care to meet his son
and his new daughter. As soon as he heard of
their approach, he went to the open door to meet them.
To Edgar he gave his right hand, with
a look which cancelled every hard word; and then he
lifted little Annie Curzon from her horse, and kissed
her on the doorstep with fatherly affection. And
between Kate and Annie a warm friendship grew apace;
and the girls were continually together, and thus,
insensibly, Kate’s sorrow was lightened by mutual
confidence and affection.
Early in June the Squire and Edgar
were to return to London, for Parliament re-opened
on the fourteenth; and a few days before their departure
Mrs. Atheling asked her husband one afternoon to take
a drive with her. “To be sure I will, Maude,”
he answered. “It isn’t twice in a
twelvemonth thou makest me such an offer.”
She was in her own little phaeton, and the Squire
settled himself comfortably at her side, and took
the reins from her hands. “Which way are
we to go?” he asked.
“We will go first to Gisbourne
Gates, and maybe as far as Belward.”
The Squire wondered a little at her
direction, for she knew Gisbourne was rather a sore
subject with him. As they approached the big iron
portals, rusty on all their hinges from long neglect,
he could not avoid saying,-
“It is a shame beyond everything
that I have not yet been able to buy Gisbourne.
The place has been wanting a master for fifteen years;
and it lays between Atheling and Belward as the middle
finger lays between the first and the third.
I thought I might manage it next year; but this Parliament
business has put me a good bit back.”
“Many things have put you back,
John. There was Edgar’s college expenses,
and the hard times, and what not beside. Look,
John! the gates are open. Let us drive in.
It is twenty years since I saw Gisbourne Towers.”
“The gates are open. What does that mean,
Maude?”
“I suppose somebody has bought the place.”
“I’m afraid so.”
“Never mind, John.”
“But I do mind. The kind
of neighbour we are to have is a very important thing.
They will live right between Atheling and Belward.
The Gisbournes were a fine Tory family. Atheling
and Gisbourne were always friends. My father
and Sir Antony went to the hunt and the hustings together.
They were finger and thumb in all county matters.
It will be hard to get as good a master of Gisbourne
as Sir Antony was.”
“John, I have a bit of right
good news for thee. Edgar is going to take Sir
Antony’s place. Will Edgar do for a neighbour?”
“Whatever art thou saying, Maude?”
“The very truth. Miss Curzon
has bought Gisbourne. Lord Ashley advised her
to do so; and she has brought down a big company of
builders and such people, and the grand old house
is to be made the finest home in the neighbourhood.
She showed me the plans yesterday, and I promised
her to bring thee over to Gisbourne this afternoon
to meet her architect and Lord Ashley and Edgar.
See, they are waiting on the terrace for thee; for
they want thy advice and thy ideas.”
It was, indeed, a wonderful afternoon.
The gentlemen went into consultation with the architect,
and a great many of the Squire’s suggestions
were received with enthusiastic approval. Mrs.
Atheling, Kate, and Annie went through the long-deserted
rooms, and talked of what should be done to give them
modern convenience and comfort, without detracting
from their air of antique splendour. Then at five
o’clock the whole party met in the faded drawing-room
and had tea, with sundry additions of cold game and
pasties, and discussed, together, the proposed plans.
At sunset the parties separated at Gisbourne Gates,
Kate going with Miss Curzon to Ashley, and the Squire
and Mrs. Atheling returning to their own home.
The Squire was far too much excited to be long quiet.
“They were very glad of my advice,
Maude,” he said, as soon as the last good-bye
had been spoken. “Ashley seconded nearly
all I proposed. He is a fine fellow. I wish
I had known him long ago.”
“Well, John, nobody can give better advice than
you can.”
“And you see I know Gisbourne,
and what can be done with it. Bless your soul!
I used to be able to tell every kind of bird that built
in Gisbourne Chase, and where to find their nests-though
I never robbed a nest; I can say that much for myself.
Well, Edgar has done a grand thing for Atheling,
and no mistake.”
“I told you Edgar-”
“Now, Maude, Edgar and me have
washed the slate between us clean. It is not
thy place to be itemising now. I say Edgar has
done well for Atheling, and I don’t care who
says different. I haven’t had such a day
since my wedding day. Edgar in Gisbourne!
An Atheling in Gisbourne! My word! Who would
have thought of such a thing? I couldn’t
hardly have asked it.”
“I should think not. There
are very few of us, John, would have the face to ask
for half of the good things the good God gives us without
a ‘please’ or a ‘thank you.’”
“Belward! Gisbourne!
Atheling! It will be all Atheling when I am gone.”
“Not it! I do not want
Belward to be sunk in that way. Belward is as
old as Atheling.”
“In a way, Maude, in a way.
It was once a part of Atheling; so was Gisbourne.
As for sinking the name, thou sunkest thy name in Atheling;
why not sink the land’s name, eh, Maude?”
And until the Squire and Edgar left
for London, such conversations were his delight; indeed,
he rather regretted his Parliamentary obligations,
and envied his wife and daughter the delightful interest
that had come into their lives. For they really
found it delightful; and all through the long, sweet,
summer days it never palled, because it was always
a fresh wing, or a fresh gallery, cabinet-work in
one parlour, upholstery work in another, the freshly
laid-out gardens, the cleared chase, the new stables
and kennels. Even the gates were a subject of
interesting debate as to whether the fine old ones
should be restored or there should be still finer
new ones.
Thus between Atheling, Ashley, and
Gisbourne, week after week passed happily. Kate
did not forget, did not cease to love and to hope;
she just bided her time, waiting, in patience, for
Fortune to bring in the ship that longed for the harbour
but could not make it. And with so much to fill
her hours joyfully, how ungrateful she would have been
to fret over the one thing denied her! The return
of the Squire and Edgar was very uncertain. Both
of them, in their letters, complained bitterly of
the obstructive policy which the Tories still unwaveringly
carried out. It was not until the twelfth of July
that the Bill got into Committee; and there it was
harassed and delayed night after night by debates
on every one of its clauses. This plan of obstructing
it occupied thirty-nine sittings, so that it did not
reach the House of Lords until the twenty-second of
September. The Squire’s letter at this
point was short and despondent:-
DEAR WIFE,-The Bill has gone
to the Lords. I expect they will send it
to the devil. I am fairly tired out; and, with
all my heart, I wish myself at Atheling.
It may be Christmas before I get there. Do
as well as you can till I come. Tell Kitty, I
would give a sovereign for a sight of her.
Your affectionate Husband,
JOHN ATHELING.
About a couple of weeks after this
letter, one evening in October, Mrs. Atheling, Kate,
and Annie were returning to Atheling House from Gisbourne,
where they had been happily busy all the afternoon.
They were easy-hearted, but rather quiet; each in
that mood of careless stillness which broods on its
own joy or sorrow. The melancholy of the autumn
night influenced them,-calm, pallid, and
a little sad, with a dull, soft murmur among the firs,-so
they did not hurry, and it was nearly dark when they
came in sight of the house. Then Mrs. Atheling
roused herself. “How good a cup of tea
will taste,” she said; “and I dare say
it is waiting, for Ann has lighted the room, I see.”
Laughing and echoing her remark, they reached the
parlour. On opening the door, Mrs. Atheling uttered
a joyful cry.
“Why, John! Why, Edgar!”
“To be sure, Maude,” answered
the Squire, leaping up and taking her in his arms.
“I wonder how thou feelest to have thy husband
come home and find thee out of the house, and not
a bit of eating ready for him.”
Then Mrs. Atheling pointed to the
table, and said, “I do not think there is any
need for complaint, John.”
“No; we managed, Edgar and me,
by good words and bad words, to get something for
ourselves-” and he waved his hand
complacently over the table, loaded with all kinds
of eatables,-a baron of cold beef, cold
Yorkshire pudding, a gypsy pie, Indian preserves, raspberry
tarts, clotted cream, roast apples, cheese celery,
fine old ale, strong gunpowder tea, and a variety
of condiments.
“What do you call this meal, John?”
“I call it a decent kind of
a tea, and I want thee to try and learn something
from its example.” Then he kissed her again,
and looked anxiously round for Kitty.
“Come here, my little girl,”
he cried; and Kitty, who had been feeling a trifle
neglected, forgot everything but the warmth and gladness
of her father’s love and welcome. Edgar
had found Annie a seat beside his own, and the Squire
managed to get his place between his wife and his
daughter. Then the “cup of tea” Mrs.
Atheling had longed for became a protracted home festival.
But they could not keep politics out of its atmosphere;
they were, indeed, so blended with the life of that
time that their separation from household matters
was impossible, and the Squire was no more anxious
to hear about his hunters and his harvest, than Mrs.
Atheling was to know the fate of the Reform Bill.
“It has passed at last, I suppose,
John,” she said, with an air of satisfied certainty.
“Thou supposest very far wrong,
then. It has been rejected again.”
“Never! Never! Never!
Oh, John, John! It is not possible!”
“The Lords did, as I told thee
they would,-that is, the Lords and the
bishops together.”
“The bishops ought to be unfrocked,”
cried Edgar, with considerable temper. “Only
one in all their number voted for Reform.”
“I’ll never go to church
again,” said Mrs. Atheling, in her unreasonable
anger.
“Tell us about it, Father,” urged Kate.
“Well, you see, Mr. Peel and
Mr. Croker led our party against the Bill; and Croker
is clever, there is no doubt of that.”
“Not to be compared to Lord
Althorp, our leader,-so calm, so courageous,
so upright,” said Edgar.
“Nobody denies it; but Croker’s
practical, vigorous views-”
“You mean his ‘sanguine
despondency,’ his delight in describing England
as bankrupt and ruined by Reform.”
“I mean nothing of the kind, Edgar; but-”
“Did the Bill pass the Commons, Father?”
asked Kate.
“It did; although in fifteen
days Peel spoke forty-eight times against it, and
Croker fifty-seven times, and Wetherell fifty-eight
times. But all they could say was just so many
lost words.”
“Think of such men disputing
the right of Manchester, Leeds, and Birmingham to
be represented in the House of Commons! What do
you say to that, Mother?”
“I only hope father wasn’t
in such a stupid bit of business, Edgar.”
And the Squire drank a glass of ale, and pretended
not to hear.
“But,” continued Edgar,
“we never lost heart; for all over the country,
and in every quarter of London, they were holding meetings
urging us not to give way,-not to give way
an inch. We were fighting for all England; and,
as Lord Althorp said, we were ready to keep Parliament
sitting till next December, or even to next December
twelvemonth.”
“I’ll warrant you!”
interrupted the Squire. “Well, Edgar, you
passed your Bill in a fine uproar of triumph; all London
in the street, shouting thanks to Althorp and the
others-Edgar Atheling among them.”
Then the Squire paused and looked at his son, and Mrs.
Atheling asked, impatiently,-
“What then, John?”
“Why, then, Lord John Russell
and Lord Althorp carried the Bill to the House of
Lords. It was a great scene. The Duke told
me about it. He said nearly every peer was in
his seat; and a large number of peeresses had been
admitted at the bar, and every inch of space in the
House was crowded. The Lord Chancellor took his
seat at the Woolsack; and the Deputy Usher of the
Black Rod threw open the doors, crying, ’A Message
from the Commons.’ Then Lord John Russell
and Lord Althorp, at the head of one hundred Members
of the House of Commons, entered, and delivered the
Bill to the Lord Chancellor.”
“Oh, how I should have liked
to have been present!” said Kate.
“Well, some day thou-”
and then the Squire suddenly stopped; but the unfinished
thought was flashed to every one present,-“some
day thou mayst be Duchess of Richmoor, and have the
right to be present;” and Kate was pleased,
and felt her heart warm to conscious hope. She
caught her mother watching her, and smiled; and Mrs.
Atheling, instantly sensitive to the unspoken feeling,
avoided comment by her eager inquiry,-
“Whatever did they say, John?”
“They said the usual words;
but the Duke told me there was a breathless silence,
and that Lord John Russell said them with the most
unusual and impressive emphasis: ’My Lords,
the House of Commons have passed an Act to Amend the
Representation of England and Wales, to which they
desire your Lordships’ Concurrence.’
Lord Grey opened the debate. I dare say Edgar
knows all about it. I believe Grey is his leader.”
“Yes,” answered Edgar,
“and very proud I am of my leader. He is
in his sixty-eighth year, and he stood there that
night to advocate the measure he proposed forty years
before, in the House of Commons. Althorp told
me he spoke with a strange calmness and solemnity,
’for the just claims of the people;’
but as soon as he sat down Lord Wharncliffe moved
that the Bill be rejected altogether.”
“That was like Wharncliffe,”
said the Squire. “No half measures for
him.”
“Wellington followed, and wanted
to know, ’How the King’s government was
to be carried on by the will of a turbulent democracy?’”
“Wellington would govern with
a sword instead of a sceptre. He would try every
cause round a drum-head. I am not with Wellington.”
“Lord Dudley followed in an
elegant, classical speech, also against the Bill.”
The Squire laughed. “I
heard about that speech. Did not Brougham call
it, ’An essay or exercise of the highest merit,
on democracies-but not on this Bill.’”
“Yes. Brougham can say
very polite and very disagreeable things. He
spoke on the fifth and last night of the debate.
Earl Grey said a more splendid declamation was never
made. All London is now quoting one passage which
he addressed to the Lords: ‘Justice deferred,’
he said, ’enhances the price at which you will
purchase your own safety; nor can you expect to gather
any other crop than they did who went before you, if
you persevere in their utterly abominable husbandry
of sowing injustice and reaping rebellion.’”
“Fine words, Edgar, fine words;
just like Brougham,-catch-words, to take
the common people.”
“They did not, however, alarm
or take the Lords. My leader closed the debate,
and in a magnificent speech implored the archbishops
and bishops not to vote against the Bill, and thus
stand before the people of England as the enemies
of a just and moderate scheme of Reform.”
“And yet they voted against
it!” said Mrs. Atheling. “I am downright
ashamed of them. The very date ought to be put
up against them forever.”
“It was the seventh of October.
All night long, until the dawning of the eighth, the
debate was continued; and until three hours after
midnight, Palace Yard, and the streets about Westminster,
were crowded with anxious watchers, though the weather
was cold and miserably wet. Towards morning their
patience was exhausted; and when the carriages of
the peers and bishops rolled out in broad daylight
there was no one there to greet them with the exécrations
and hisses they deserved. The whole of our work
this session in the Commons has been done in vain.
But we shall win next time, even if we compel the King
to create as many new Reform peers as will pass the
Bill in spite of the old Lords.”
“Edgar, you are talking nonsense-if
not treason.”
“Pardon me, Father. I am
only giving you the ultimatum of Reform. The
Bill must pass the Lords next session, or you
may call Reform Revolution. The people are particularly
angry at the bishops. They dare not appear on
the streets; curses follow them, and their carriages
have been repeatedly stoned.”
“There is a verse beginning,
‘Inasmuch as ye did it not,’ etc.,-I
wonder if they will ever dare to repeat it again.
They will do the church a deal of harm.”
“Oh, no,” said Edgar.
“The church does not stand on the bishops.”
“Be easy with the bishops,”
added the Squire. “They have to scheme
a bit in order to get the most out of both worlds.
They scorn to answer the people according to their
idols. They are politically right.”
“No, sir,” said Edgar.
“Whatever is morally wrong cannot be politically
right. The church is well represented by the clergy;
they have generally sympathised with the people.
One of them, indeed, called Smith-Sydney
Smith-made a speech at Taunton, three days
after our defeat, that has gone like wild-fire throughout
the length and breadth of England;” and Edgar
took a paper out of his pocket, and read, with infinite
delight and appreciation, the pungent wit which made
“Mrs. Partington” famous throughout Christendom:-
“As for the possibility of the
House of Lords preventing a reform of Parliament,
I hold it to be the most absurd notion that ever
entered into human imagination. I do not mean
to be disrespectful, but the attempt of the Lords
to stop the progress of Reform reminds me very
forcibly of the great storm at Sidmouth, and of
the conduct of the excellent Mrs. Partington on
that occasion. In the winter of 1824, there
set in a great flood upon that town; the waves rushed
in upon the houses; and everything was threatened
with destruction. In the midst of this sublime
and terrible storm, Dame Partington-who
lived upon the beach-was seen at the door
of her house, with mop and pattens, trundling her mop,
squeezing out the sea-water, and vigorously pushing
away the Atlantic Ocean. The Atlantic was
roused. Mrs. Partington’s spirit was
up; but I need not tell you, the contest was unequal.
The Atlantic Ocean beat Mrs. Partington. She was
excellent at a slop or a puddle; but she should
not have meddled with a tempest. Gentlemen,
be at your ease, be quiet and steady. You
will beat Mrs. Partington."
“It was not respectful to liken
the Lords of England to an old woman, now was it,
Mother?” asked the Squire.
But Mrs. Atheling only laughed the
more, and the conversation drifted so completely into
politics that Kitty and Annie grew weary of it, and
said they wished to go to their rooms. And as
they left the parlour together, Edgar suddenly stayed
Kitty a moment, and said, “I had nearly forgotten
to tell you something. Miss Vyner is to be married,
on the second of December, to Cecil North. I
am going to London in time for the wedding.”
And Kitty said, “I am glad to
hear it, Edgar,” and quickly closed the door.
But she lay long awake, wondering what influence this
event would have upon Piers and his future, until,
finally, the wonder passed into a little verse which
they had learned together; and with it singing in
her heart, she fell asleep:-
“Thou art mine!
I am thine!
Thou art locked in this heart
of mine;
Whereof is lost the little
key:
So there, forever, thou must
be!”